The Relation of Volcanicity and Orogeny to Climatic Change

1947 ◽  
Vol 84 (6) ◽  
pp. 321-333 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. E. Fuchs ◽  
T. T. Paterson

The purpose of this communication is to draw attention to the possible effect of vast and synchronous volcanic eruptions and associated earth-movement, not only on local but on world climate. It is divided into two parts, the first dealing with the volcanic aspect and its particular relation to climatic changes in East Africa, and the second discussing the wider significance of the proposition and the possibly greater effect of orogenic movements on world climate when associated with volcanic episodes.

Author(s):  
Jürgen Ehlers

The last 2–3 Ma have witnessed climatic changes of a scale unknown to the preceding 300 Ma. In the cold periods vegetation was reduced to a steppe, giving rise to large-scale aeolian deposition of sand and loess and river sands and gravels. In the warm stages, flora and fauna recolonized the region. Parts of Europe were repeatedly covered by mountain glaciers or continental ice sheets which brought along huge amounts of unweathered rock debris from their source areas. The ice sheets dammed rivers and redirected drainage towards the North Sea. They created a new, glacial landscape. This chapter presents an outline of the climatic history, and in particular the glacial processes involved in shaping the landscapes of western Europe. By convention, geologists generally tend to draw stratigraphical boundaries in marine deposits because they are more likely to represent continuous sedimentation and relatively consistent environments in comparison to terrestrial sediments. However, marine deposits from the period in question are relatively rarely exposed at the surface. According to a conclusion of the International Geological Congress 1948 the Tertiary/Quaternary boundary was defined as the base of the marine deposits of the Calabrian in southern Italy. In the Calabrian sediments fossils are found that reflect a very distinct climatic cooling (amongst others the foraminifer Hyalinea baltica). This climatic change roughly coincides with a reversal of the earth’s magnetic field; it is situated at the upper boundary of what is called the Olduvai Event. Consequently, it is relatively easy to identify; its age is today estimated at 1.77 Ma (Shackleton et al. 1990). However, in contrast to the older parts of the earth’s history, the significant changes within the Quaternary are not changes in faunal composition but changes in climate. For reasons of long-term climatic evolution the base of the Calabrian is not a very suitable global boundary. Its adoption excludes some of the major glaciations from the Quaternary. Therefore, in major parts of Europe another Tertiary/Quaternary boundary is in use, based on the stratigraphy of the Lower Rhine area (e.g. Zagwijn 1989). Here the most significant climatic change is already recorded as far back as the Gauss/Matuyama magnetic reversal (some 2.6 Ma ago).


1984 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
pp. 43-46 ◽  
Author(s):  
Curt Covey

The isotope composition of ocean sediments is the chief data source for Pleistocene climatic changes. It is generally believed that the18O/16O ratio of a sample indicates the global total of glacial ice at the time the sample was deposited. This is roughly correct, but numerous complicating factors limit the accuracy of the isotope proxies.


1990 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
pp. 359-359
Author(s):  
B. Stauffer ◽  
H. Oeschger ◽  
J. Schwander

Measurements on ice-core samples showed that atmospheric methane concentration changed with the large climatic cycles during the last two glaciations (Stauffer and others, 1988; Raynaud and others, 1988). The methane concentration is lower in cold periods and higher in warm periods. In this paper we discuss the results of CH4 measurements of samples from periods of minor climatic change, like the climatic optimum 8000 years B.P. and the Younger Dryas period about 10 000 to 11 000 years B.P.. The data are interpreted in terms of the present understanding of methane sources and sinks.


2020 ◽  
Vol 117 (20) ◽  
pp. 10706-10714 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hiroyuki Murakami ◽  
Thomas L. Delworth ◽  
William F. Cooke ◽  
Ming Zhao ◽  
Baoqiang Xiang ◽  
...  

Owing to the limited length of observed tropical cyclone data and the effects of multidecadal internal variability, it has been a challenge to detect trends in tropical cyclone activity on a global scale. However, there is a distinct spatial pattern of the trends in tropical cyclone frequency of occurrence on a global scale since 1980, with substantial decreases in the southern Indian Ocean and western North Pacific and increases in the North Atlantic and central Pacific. Here, using a suite of high-resolution dynamical model experiments, we show that the observed spatial pattern of trends is very unlikely to be explained entirely by underlying multidecadal internal variability; rather, external forcing such as greenhouse gases, aerosols, and volcanic eruptions likely played an important role. This study demonstrates that a climatic change in terms of the global spatial distribution of tropical cyclones has already emerged in observations and may in part be attributable to the increase in greenhouse gas emissions.


1990 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
pp. 359
Author(s):  
B. Stauffer ◽  
H. Oeschger ◽  
J. Schwander

Measurements on ice-core samples showed that atmospheric methane concentration changed with the large climatic cycles during the last two glaciations (Stauffer and others, 1988; Raynaud and others, 1988). The methane concentration is lower in cold periods and higher in warm periods. In this paper we discuss the results of CH4 measurements of samples from periods of minor climatic change, like the climatic optimum 8000 years B.P. and the Younger Dryas period about 10 000 to 11 000 years B.P.. The data are interpreted in terms of the present understanding of methane sources and sinks.


1988 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 7-15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Reid A. Bryson

Research over the past century has shown that the rates and magnitudes of climatic change constitute a continuum. Changes have now been identified in the climatic record that range in duration from interannual through decades and centuries to the multi-millennial time-scale. Examples range from the drought years of the 1930 and 1970 decades to the ponderous comings and goings of the ice-ages. More recently it has become clear that some changes can be quite rapid. In recent decades great progress has been made in identifying the causes of climatic variation.The present understanding of the causes of climatic change emphasizes continental drift (or ‘plate tectonics’) at the million-years' scale, with pulses of plate movement producing significant bursts of volcanic activity that may act on the millennial or century scale. At the multi-millennial scale there is growing agreement that the variations in irradiance of the Earth, resulting from slow changes in the Sun-Earth geometry (the so-called Milankovitch variations), exercise the operative control on the timing of ice-ages and interglacials. At the decadal and interannual scales there is less agreement; but there is at least a body of research which suggests that significant volcanic activity is a contributing factor. There is considerable agreement—but little direct evidence—that anthropogenic causes such as increased carbon dioxide and other Man-made or-enhanced trace gases in the atmosphere, will be important in the coming decades.Cultural responses might be expected to differ across this continuum. To assess the expected response to a climatic variation, one must know at least the shape of the response surface.There is probably a critical threshold combination of climatic change magnitude and duration. Human cultures seem to be adapted to frequently-occurring short ‘aberrations’ from the expected climate. Some evidence indicates, on the other hand, that relatively small changes of climates (of the order of a century in duration) have been associated over the past 8,000 years with cultural changes that proved large enough to lead to different names being assigned in perhaps half of the cultural termini identified. A climate model which includes the effect of volcanic aerosols, suggests that most of the climatic changes associated with these globally synchronous cultural termini are related to peaks of volcanic activity. Some apparently catastrophic events have been recognized in this connection.There remains the problem of assessing, in realistic terms, the impact of large-magnitude climatic variations on modern human societies. Of particular concern is the effect of climatic events associated with very large-scale short-term insertions of aerosols into the atmosphere. It is likely that non-equilibrium models of the atmosphere, with specified sea-surface temperatures, would give realistic results if refined to the degree that they could replicate events of lesser magnitude which have occurred in the past century. At present there appear to be no models in which the formulation of the radiative effect of aerosols or gases gives a good match with observed radiative effects. It seems that much more research, including field experiments, will be needed if science is to supply reliable advice to society on the nature of coming climatic changes.


1932 ◽  
Vol 69 (5) ◽  
pp. 193-205 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. J. Richards ◽  
L. A. Cammiade ◽  
M. C. Burkitt

HUMAN artifacts can often be very useful to the geologist. When they occur in sufficient numbers and are characteristic, prehistorians can be definite in assigning the industries to a certain culture or cultures, and they can then be utilized by the geologist in the same way as are fossils. In Europe during a part of Quaternary times Lower Palaeolithic cultures flourished. Now Quaternary times in Europe can, of course, be readily subdivided into glacial and interglacial periods, but these naturally did not occur further south. In East Africa geological evidence has been adduced to show that intense pluvial periods took the place of our European glaciations, while during the interglacial phases the African areas suffered from arid conditions. Lower Palaeolithic industries are found at certain levels in East Africa and they enable the geologist to correlate the East African and European sequences. South-East India (Madras) is also not an area where glaciations ever occurred: but, we ask, can geological evidence be adduced to demonstrate climatic changes corresponding to those found to have occurred in East Africa ? Lower Palaeolithic industries occur in great numbers in South-East India; whereas most of them have been merely collected from the surface, and are therefore useless for the purposes of exact dating, a number of finds in situ in definite layers have been made, and as in East Africa these can be used as datum lines for correlating purposes.


1983 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 100-116 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patricia F. McDowell

AbstractDuring the Holocene, moderate climatic and vegetational changes triggered several episodes of adjustment in the Brush Creek fluvial system. The alluvial chronology includes an episode of erosion at 7800 – 5700 yr B.P. corresponding to the mid-Holocene precipitation minimum and an episode of floodplain construction at 5700 – 5000 yr B.P. corresponding to a rapid increase in precipitation. Holocene climatic changes have influenced the sedimentology of the alluvial deposits and soil development on them. Fluvial adjustment is caused primarily by hydrologic and hydraulic changes related to climatic change, but there is no simple model for fluvial response to climatic change. The relationship between the direction of climatic change and the type of fluvial response is complex.


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